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Take a look at the newly released Gitpod Desktop CLI.
Gitpod workspaces include a command-line utility (gp) that comes installed in all workspaces and prebuilds. The gp CLI is intended only to work inside a Gitpod workspace and is not intended to be installed on your local or other machine.

init

Gitpod workspaces can be configured - see Configuring Workspaces for more details. gp init generates a default .gitpod.yml file. You can customize it to match your requirements. Alternatively, gp init -i is an interactive guide which helps create the .gitpod.yml configuration file based on a few questions you answer. Example to start a interactive guide of .gitpod.yml configuration file:

validate

The gp validate command is currently in Beta · Send feedback.
Starts a workspace within in your currently opened workspace to quickly apply and review your configuration changes. Allows you to troubleshoot your .gitpod.yml, workspace image, ports, tasks and more. See configure workspaces for more on validating a workspace configuration.

open

Modern editors/IDE’s support command line tooling to open a file (e.g. VS Code code foo.txt). In Gitpod, this can be done using gp open <filename>. We also added common aliases for gp open: code and open. Example to open the README.md file in the current directory:

preview

gp preview opens a URL. The default is to show the URL in a preview pane within the editor or IDE directly. Alternatively, you can show the preview a new tab with the --external flag. Make sure you provide a valid URL, i.e. including the protocol. For example, http://localhost:8080. You can also use gp preview <url> --external to open the URL in a new browser tab. Example opening a gitpod workspace port 3000 as a tab using gp url and gp preview:

url

Gitpod workspaces can expose services to the internet. gp url provides the URL which points to a service served from a Gitpod workspace. For example gp url 8080 prints the URL which points to the service listening on port 8080 in this current workspace. You can combine the preview and the url command to open a certain path instead of the default URL. For instance:
If you put this into the .gitpod.yml to open the a certain page on startup, make sure you ignore the default action when the port opens.

env

With gp env API_ENDPOINT=https://api.example.com you can set an API_ENDPOINT environment variable that is accessible for this project, even if you stop the workspace and start a new one. To delete or unset an environment variable, you use gp env -u API_ENDPOINT. Please refer to the help output provided by gp env --help for more use cases of the gp env command. For instance, you can use following to get your all Gitpod environment variables:

sync-await

In situations where you work with multiple terminals and one depends on a task in another terminal to complete, gp sync-await <name> waits until you call gp sync-done <name> in another terminal. See Start Tasks for a real-world example.

sync-done

To notify a gp sync-await <name> call (see previous chapter), you can call gp sync-done <name>. A common use case is the following where we have three terminals:
  • Terminal 1: A build process takes several minutes to complete. At the end, you call gp sync-done build.
  • Terminal 2: You use gp sync-await build && npm run start-database to wait for the build to complete before you start a database
  • Terminal 3: You use gp sync-await build && npm run dev to wait for the build to complete before you start the dev server.
See Start Tasks for a real-world example.

snapshot

For sharing a complete clone of a workspace with others, gp snapshot is basically the CLI method for getting a snapshot URL. To learn more about snapshots, see Collaboration & Sharing of Workspaces

ssh

gp ssh outputs a command you can copy/paste to another terminal to connect to your workspace via SSH. The command requires that you have uploaded a public key to Gitpod.

stop

gp stop is the CLI method of stopping a workspace. Example to stop the current gitpod workspace using gitpod CLI:

tasks

Programmatically view and interact with workspace tasks as defined in the project’s .gitpod.yml. Useful when using the command line, such as ssh’ing into a workspace or after accidentally losing view of a terminal and it’s output.

list

Returns a table-formatted list of tasks, their name, state and the ID of the terminal in which the task is executed.
Tip: You can see the task you are currently attached to highlighted in green.
Use gp tasks list --no-color to disable colors for the output. It also respects the NO_COLOR & GP_NO_COLOR environment variable.

attach

Creates a connection from a user terminal to a given workspace’s task terminal. The session is interactive. Once attached, both stdin and stdout are streamed between the user and the remote terminal. Allowing the user to run commands directly in the task terminal. Run without arguments to get a selection prompt. When only one task is running, attach will skip the prompt and automatically connect.
Alternatively, specify the Terminal ID that you can see with gp tasks list:

stop

Interrupts one or more running tasks and automatically closes their terminals. Useful when you don’t need a certain task anymore, when authoring the .gitpod.yml file or when you start a workspace for projects with several tasks but you don’t need them and want to save time and resources. Run without arguments to get a selection prompt. Only running tasks will be offered as a choice.
Specify the Terminal ID that you can see with gp tasks list.
Run with the --all flag to stop all running tasks.

timeout

Interact with workspace timeout configuration. You can learn more in Life of a Workspace.
Note: You can only have one workspace with extended timeout at a time.
The default timeout, and the ability to extend a workspace timeout depends on your billing configuration.

set

Sets the current workspace’s timeout to the given value. The value must be a positive integer followed by a unit of time. The unit of time can be one of m, h for minutes and hours, respectively. The maximum workspace timeout is 24 hours.

show

Shows the current workspace’s timeout.

extend

Extends the current workspace timeout from the default, or currently set value to 180 minutes.

info

Displays information about the current workspace (such as the workspace ID and URL) and also the workspace class.
Use gp info --json to get the output in JSON format for programmatic use in (e.g. in shell scripts).

ports

Provides a way to manage a workspace’s ports. Applies to both: ports defined in .gitpod.yml and ports that are undeclared but are opened during the lifetime of the workspace.

list

Outputs a table-formatted list of ports along with their status, URL, name and description.
Use gp ports list --no-color to disable colors for the output. It also respects the NO_COLOR & GP_NO_COLOR environment variable.

expose

In Gitpod, services/servers running on a port need to be exposed before they become accessible from the internet. This process only works with services listening on 0.0.0.0 and not just localhost. Sometimes it is not possible to make a server listen on 0.0.0.0, e.g. because it is not your code and there are simply no means of configuration. In that case, gp ports expose <port> can be used to forward all traffic form a socket listing on all network interfaces to your process listening on localhost only.

await

When writing tasks to be executed on workspace start, one sometimes wants to wait for an http service to be available. gp ports await does that. Here’s an example that will open a certain path once a service is a available:

visibility

You can change a port’s visibility to make it only available for users with workspace access (private) or everyone who knows the port’s URL (public). A port’s default visibility is always private, unless configured differently from within .gitpod.yml. Here’s an example which will make port 3000 public:
Here’s an example which will make port 3000 private:

protocol

By default ports running in the workspace are assumed to be HTTP. You can dynamically configure (without a workspace restart) a port to use HTTPS with the gp ports protocol command. For example, to convert port 3000 to https:
For example, to convert port 3000 to http:

top

Displays the current workspace’s class info along with the used and available CPU and memory.
  • Use gp top --json to get the output in JSON format for programmatic use in (e.g. in shell scripts).
  • Use gp top --no-color to disable colors for the output. It also respects the NO_COLOR & GP_NO_COLOR environment variable.

docs

Opens the Gitpod documentation in a new browser tab.